Our report is that we had a news today for
discover a very exciting crop circles
in near Chungnam Boryoung City, South Korea.
These pictures were taken by owner of his
blog
http://blog.naver.com/98papa In my
opinion, this works by sky-team, our brother
of light gave it us, it mean worthy to
evaluate for the first time in Korea of the
Eastern Side.
If you want to receive more detail
information, I could add it later.
Please subscribe it and post to your
website.
Lim Chang Rok, wave of owner website,
world peace communication (WPC),
www.wavero.net

http://www.kornkreise-forschung.de
The analemma or figure-8
shape of our Moon as shown
in South Korean crops
A new crop picture which
appeared in South Korea
on June 12, 2008 seems to be
a close conceptual copy
of the "four month lunar
calendar" which appeared at
East Field near Avebury on
July 7, 2007 (see
www.lucypringle.co.uk
Now in 2008 we are seeing
two lunar phase cycles
rather than four, as
indicated by two long series
of small white balls which
have been drawn as large for
a full Moon or else small
for a new Moon:
Our Moon will be "full" on
June 19, 2008 then again on
July 18, 2008. Several parts
of those two lunar
cycles actually
overlap: from June 25 to 27
(upper left) before a new
Moon on July 3,
then again from July 10 to
12 after a new Moon on July
3 (lower right).
That is also why a broad
outer circle which
represents Earth's annual
orbit about the Sun was
drawn there: in order to
emphasize "one full solar
year" of four seasons (light
for six months of
summer, then dark for six
months of winter).
The analemma shape of our
Sun is relatively easy to
photograph:
By contrast, the analemma
shape of our Moon is
relatively hard to
photograph (see
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap050713.html),
because any new Moon (upper
left) appears faint versus a
full Moon (lower right):
That is also how we know
that those mysterious crop
artists were telling us
about the "Moon" on June 12
in South Korea, and not
about the "Sun", because the
round white balls as shown
there vary greatly in
size from small to large, in
direct proportion to the
Moon's intensity throughout
any 29.5-day phase cycle.
Every effort should be made
to determine whether the
new Korean crop picture is
real or else human-made, by
careful inspection of the
flattened plants there. A
lot of hard science for a
fake!
Red Collie
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The flag
of South Korea, or Taegukgi
(Although revised official
Romanization is Taegeukgi, the word
Taegukgi has been used in
English-speaking countries
historically) has three parts: a
white background; a red and blue
taegeuk in the center; and four
black trigrams, one in each corner
of the flag. The flag was designed
by Bak Yeong-hyo, the Korean
ambassador to Japan. King Gojong
proclaimed the Taegeukgi to be the
official flag of Korea on 6 March
1883.
The four trigrams originates in the
Chinese book I Ching, representing
the four Chinese philosophical ideas
about the universe: harmony,
symmetry, balance, circulation. The
general design of the flag also
derives from traditional use of the
tricolour symbol (red, blue and
yellow) by Koreans starting from the
early era of Korean history. The
white background symbolizes
"cleanliness of the people." The
taegeuk represents the origin of all
things in the universe; holding the
two principles of "Eum", the
negative aspect rendered in blue,
and "Yang", the positive aspect
rendered in red, in perfect balance.
Together, they represent a
continuous movement within infinity,
the two merging as one. The four
trigrams are:
* ||| Force (☰; geon (건; 乾) in
Korean) = heaven (天), spring (春),
east (東), virtue (仁);
* ¦¦¦ Field (☷; gon (곤; 坤)) = earth
(地), summer (夏), west (西), justice
(義);
* |¦| Radiance (☲; ri (리; 離)) = sun
(日), autumn (秋), south (南), courtesy
(禮);
* ¦|¦ Gorge (☵; gam (감; 坎)) = moon
(月), winter (冬), north (北),
knowledge or wisdom (智).
Traditionally, the four trigrams are
related to the Five Elements of
fire, water, earth, wood, and metal.
An analogy could also be drawn with
the
four western classical elements.
Design used in the past, but now
abandoned.
The earliest surviving depiction of
the flag was printed in a U.S. Navy
book Flags of Maritime Nations in
July 1882.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_South_Korea
Ubuntu, in Zulu it means"humanity
toward others", or"we
are people because of other people"
Ubuntu 8.04 - a Linux
based free OS |
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This mark is very
commonly used by the
legal profession in
legal texts and legal
codes to set out a
section of the law, or a
legal regulation:

This is self-evidently
very, very similar to
what we see in the
Korean crop
glyph. It may be a way
of saying that this
formation, or maybe
others too, have to do
with laying down the law
-- whether natural law,
cosmic law, galactic
federation law,
spiritual law, who
knows?
Maybe the cosmic
sheriffs are delivering
a galactic legal summons
or warrant to us, or
reciting the law prior
to imposing a legal
sanction. Or something
like that.
But for me, the
symbolism is clear. Of
course, there is other
information here too.
Richard Sauder |
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